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New GloFish are staying at top and sides of tank, not swimming around

Pets Asked on August 12, 2021

I just bought three GloFish at PetSmart and put them in a tank I had ready at home. One of them stays at the top, sometimes it’s two of them. The others stay near the wall.

Petsmart said that my chlorine, nitrate and nitrite levels were fine. I have been running my tank before getting the fish for about a week. I have no algae in the tank, and everything I have is by TopFin. I have a 10 gallon tank. My filter is running fine (I think, the indicator is blue, not red), and my heater runs at 78 degrees Fahrenheit (around 26 degrees Celsius). I have not fed them, as they were fed at the store.

I am scared, as another user said all 7 of his GloFish died.

What do I do? Should I replace the water? Should I increase the tank water volume beyond 10 gallons?

Edit: Sadly, they died.

2 Answers

Replacing the water is not the way to keep your fish alive.

What you need to do is change about 10% of the water once a week and be sure not to overfeed the fish.

You might feed a little once every 3 days until your tank is in biological balance.

You need to buy a water test and test the water every other day for the first week. You will probably get an ammonia or nitrite spike within a week or two, and if you do, cut the feeding and replace 20% of the water every two days until the nitrite or ammonia spike is over.

Here is some reading you have to do to understand how and why the cycling of your tank is needed.

Answered by trond hansen on August 12, 2021

Sorry to hear about your fish. Please don't despair, a lot of shops set you up to fail. From the sounds of what you've written in your question, you did everything right.


Firstly, make sure you read about the nitrogen cycle. If you read and understand one thing about fish, this is probably the most helpful.

Secondly, get yourself a test kit. You can either get a liquid one or the strips but beware, whilst the liquid one is much more expensive, it lasts a lot longer and gives better readings. The liquid one gives you the most important reading for a new tank, which is ammonia.

What happened?

From reading your question it sounds like ammonia poisoning--it's a little tricky to say exactly over the internet, but this is normally the most common stumbling block in new aquariums. Running the tank for a week won't necessarily ensure it is cycled because if there is no source of ammonia, there will be no bacteria to convert it and it may just run clean for a week. Check out this guide on cycling a new tank: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eBMgppmFyoE

Much of fish keeping is dealing with water chemistry. Any ammonia in the water at all will be lethal to fish.

What next?

Please don't give up with fish. They can be an incredibly rewarding pet to keep. This time, make sure you've tested the water yourself (a lot of shops don't even test for ammonia when they test it for you). Make sure you follow one of the methods in the video I posted above.

Do all your homework first before getting the fish; it can be tempting to do it sooner but it's definitely better to wait until the levels are showing correctly.

Answered by Henders on August 12, 2021

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